After UFC and Darts, Tradeify Signs Cricket Star Travis Head

Thursday, 02/04/2026 | 07:45 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • The prop trading company adds an Australian cricket star as it broadens a sports marketing push around trader psychology.
  • The agreement follows the firm’s Israel Adesanya campaign and a recent push on platform differentiation.
Travis Head in Tradeify's marketing campaign
Travis Head in Tradeify's marketing campaign

Tradeify has signed Australian cricketer Travis Head as a long-term brand ambassador, the trader evaluation platform announced today (Thuersday), coinciding with the start of the 2026 Indian Premier League season.

Head's name joins a short list that already includes darts player Luke Littler and mixed martial artist Israel Adesanya under Tradeify's "The Champion Mindset" banner, a campaign the company says draws a parallel between composure under pressure in sport and in financial trading.

The deal gives Tradeify bat branding across all of Head's matches for the duration of the partnership, a visible placement that the company said it plans to use as the foundation for broader cricket fan engagement, starting with a signed bat giveaway.

Head's Big-Match Record Drives the Pitch

Head, 32, scored 137 from 120 balls in the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup final against India in Ahmedabad to guide Australia to a six-wicket victory and a record sixth title, earning him the player of the match award. He contributed to Australia's victory in the 2025/26 Ashes series before the IPL began.

At the tournament level, Head has accumulated 941 runs across 28 appearances for Sunrisers Hyderabad and enters the 2026 season needing 59 more to reach 1,000 runs for the franchise, according to published statistics.

Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify
Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify

It is precisely that association Tradeify is paying for. "Travis has dominated big international moments for the last four years, becoming a clutch player for Australia with countless match winning performances in Test series, World Cups and The Ashes," said Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify.

"We love his mentality and ability to deliver in big moments by keeping a cool head, mixing a calm mind with a front-footed proactive approach - a quality that mirrors the mindset of top traders."

Tradeify's Sports Roster Takes Shape

The cricket deal is Tradeify's third sports partnership in quick succession. The firm signed UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya in January 2026 as the first chapter of The Champion Mindset campaign, then added PDC World Darts Champion Luke Littler.

Head now completes a trio that spans three sports and three distinct global audiences, with cricket providing the broadest potential reach given the IPL's viewership numbers across South Asia, Australia and the broader diaspora.

Head's response kept the framing consistent. "Achieving sustained success in professional cricket takes the right mindset - staying level headed and maintaining composure, no matter what comes your way," he said.

The campaign architecture reflects how the firm is thinking about brand-building beyond the funded trader community. Tradeify has also been developing its platform product in parallel, as seen in its integration with WealthCharts, which the firm positioned as a step toward giving traders more analytical infrastructure alongside the evaluation model itself.

Prop Firms and Sports Marketing

Tradeify is not alone in pursuing this direction. The funded trading sector has moved steadily toward sports partnerships as firms look for ways to differentiate brands in a crowded market.

Hantec Markets signed a UFC APAC sponsorship earlier this year to promote both its CFD and prop brands across Asian markets, while Hola Prime named NBA player Karl-Anthony Towns as its first sports ambassador in a move that targeted US basketball audiences. The trend runs wider across retail trading as well, with FxPro extending its McLaren Formula One partnership in what it described as its largest sponsorship commitment to date.

The logic behind these deals is not new. As Finance Magnates noted in an earlier analysis, retail brokers and trading firms have long used football and other sports to build consumer recognition in markets where direct performance marketing has become more regulated and more expensive. Sports ambassador deals allow firms to reach potential clients through affinity rather than product pitches, with the athlete's credibility doing work that advertising alone cannot.

Tradeify has signed Australian cricketer Travis Head as a long-term brand ambassador, the trader evaluation platform announced today (Thuersday), coinciding with the start of the 2026 Indian Premier League season.

Head's name joins a short list that already includes darts player Luke Littler and mixed martial artist Israel Adesanya under Tradeify's "The Champion Mindset" banner, a campaign the company says draws a parallel between composure under pressure in sport and in financial trading.

The deal gives Tradeify bat branding across all of Head's matches for the duration of the partnership, a visible placement that the company said it plans to use as the foundation for broader cricket fan engagement, starting with a signed bat giveaway.

Head's Big-Match Record Drives the Pitch

Head, 32, scored 137 from 120 balls in the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup final against India in Ahmedabad to guide Australia to a six-wicket victory and a record sixth title, earning him the player of the match award. He contributed to Australia's victory in the 2025/26 Ashes series before the IPL began.

At the tournament level, Head has accumulated 941 runs across 28 appearances for Sunrisers Hyderabad and enters the 2026 season needing 59 more to reach 1,000 runs for the franchise, according to published statistics.

Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify
Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify

It is precisely that association Tradeify is paying for. "Travis has dominated big international moments for the last four years, becoming a clutch player for Australia with countless match winning performances in Test series, World Cups and The Ashes," said Brett Simberkoff, founder and CEO of Tradeify.

"We love his mentality and ability to deliver in big moments by keeping a cool head, mixing a calm mind with a front-footed proactive approach - a quality that mirrors the mindset of top traders."

Tradeify's Sports Roster Takes Shape

The cricket deal is Tradeify's third sports partnership in quick succession. The firm signed UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya in January 2026 as the first chapter of The Champion Mindset campaign, then added PDC World Darts Champion Luke Littler.

Head now completes a trio that spans three sports and three distinct global audiences, with cricket providing the broadest potential reach given the IPL's viewership numbers across South Asia, Australia and the broader diaspora.

Head's response kept the framing consistent. "Achieving sustained success in professional cricket takes the right mindset - staying level headed and maintaining composure, no matter what comes your way," he said.

The campaign architecture reflects how the firm is thinking about brand-building beyond the funded trader community. Tradeify has also been developing its platform product in parallel, as seen in its integration with WealthCharts, which the firm positioned as a step toward giving traders more analytical infrastructure alongside the evaluation model itself.

Prop Firms and Sports Marketing

Tradeify is not alone in pursuing this direction. The funded trading sector has moved steadily toward sports partnerships as firms look for ways to differentiate brands in a crowded market.

Hantec Markets signed a UFC APAC sponsorship earlier this year to promote both its CFD and prop brands across Asian markets, while Hola Prime named NBA player Karl-Anthony Towns as its first sports ambassador in a move that targeted US basketball audiences. The trend runs wider across retail trading as well, with FxPro extending its McLaren Formula One partnership in what it described as its largest sponsorship commitment to date.

The logic behind these deals is not new. As Finance Magnates noted in an earlier analysis, retail brokers and trading firms have long used football and other sports to build consumer recognition in markets where direct performance marketing has become more regulated and more expensive. Sports ambassador deals allow firms to reach potential clients through affinity rather than product pitches, with the athlete's credibility doing work that advertising alone cannot.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
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About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch. Education: MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
  • 3400 Articles
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